log☇︎
215800+ entries in 1.663s
decimation: The20YearIRCloud: in the UK they still have most of their canals, you can rent a narrowboat and cruise them: http://www.waterwaysholidays.com/
The20YearIRCloud: we have a canal here
gernika: I am a consultant in silly-con valley
ben_vulpes: is running a consulting shop and sucking dollars out of shartups a short on the bezzle market?
gribble: Error: I am not seeing this user on IRC. If you want information about a registered gpg user, try the 'gpg info' command instead.
gribble: BTC-E | This order would exceed the size of the order book. You would sell 191.29848 bitcoins, for a total of 77860.4017 USD and take the price to 0. | Data vintage: 66.5407 seconds
gribble: BTC-E | A market order to sell 100 bitcoins right now would net 40860.7184 USD and would take the last price down to 405.9010 USD, resulting in an average price of 408.6072 USD/BTC. | Data vintage: 60.6819 seconds
gribble: BTC-E | This order would exceed the size of the order book. You would sell 191.29848 bitcoins, for a total of 77860.4017 USD and take the price to 0. | Data vintage: 33.1611 seconds
gribble: Bitstamp | A market order to sell 1000 bitcoins right now would net 415085.0852 USD and would take the last price down to 407.0000 USD, resulting in an average price of 415.0851 USD/BTC. | Data vintage: 0.0463 seconds
gribble: BTC-E | A market order to sell 10 bitcoins right now would net 4108.8243 USD and would take the last price down to 410.4270 USD, resulting in an average price of 410.8824 USD/BTC. | Data vintage: 0.0005 seconds
gribble: (market sell [--fiat] [--market <market>] [--currency XXX] <value>) -- Calculate the effect on the market depth of a market sell order of <value> bitcoins. If <market> is provided, uses that exchange. Default is Bitstamp. If --currency XXX is provided, converts to that fiat currency. Default is USD. If '--fiat' option is given, <value> denotes the size of the order in fiat.
gribble: Error: "--market" is not a valid command.
gribble: Error: '10' is not a valid currency code.
gribble: (market sell [--fiat] [--market <market>] [--currency XXX] <value>) -- Calculate the effect on the market depth of a market sell order of <value> bitcoins. If <market> is provided, uses that exchange. Default is Bitstamp. If --currency XXX is provided, converts to that fiat currency. Default is USD. If '--fiat' option is given, <value> denotes the size of the order in fiat.
gribble: (market sell [--fiat] [--market <market>] [--currency XXX] <value>) -- Calculate the effect on the market depth of a market sell order of <value> bitcoins. If <market> is provided, uses that exchange. Default is Bitstamp. If --currency XXX is provided, converts to that fiat currency. Default is USD. If '--fiat' option is given, <value> denotes the size of the order in fiat.
gribble: Bitstamp | This order would exceed the size of the order book. You would sell 112732.42 bitcoins, for a total of 4941219.5228 USD and take the price to 0. | Data vintage: 162.7177 seconds
gribble: Bitstamp | A market order to sell 10000 bitcoins right now would net 3671722.1909 USD and would take the last price down to 270.1200 USD, resulting in an average price of 367.1722 USD/BTC. | Data vintage: 162.5575 seconds
gribble: Bitstamp | A market order to sell 2000 bitcoins right now would net 817749.7190 USD and would take the last price down to 400.1300 USD, resulting in an average price of 408.8749 USD/BTC. | Data vintage: 153.0889 seconds
gribble: Bitstamp | A market order to sell 10 bitcoins right now would net 4219.4919 USD and would take the last price down to 421.7300 USD, resulting in an average price of 421.9492 USD/BTC. | Data vintage: 142.6649 seconds
gribble: (sell <amount> <thing> [at|@] <priceperunit> <otherthing> [<notes>]) -- Logs a sell order for <amount> units of <thing, at a price of <price> per unit, in units of <otherthing>. Use the optional <notes> field to put in any special notes. <price> may include an arithmetical expression, and {(mtgox|bitstamp)(ask|bid|last|high|low|avg)} to index price to mtgox ask, bid, last, high, low, (1 more message)
dub: hmm, last looked at reason a looong time ago
asciilifeform: when these people do design boards (i have seen this, believe or not) it's typically done by a kid with w4r3z cad proggy.
dub: that looks like a 3d render of a reason rack\
decimation: yeah, there's not a working osx port either
asciilifeform: and if anyone is using it for serious work, they are using a patched version and aren't sharing
asciilifeform: situations like this are more interesting than appear on surface - because they make it abundantly clear that no one really gives a flying fuck if the thing works or not
decimation: but, it is a pretty tall mountain of chairs, if you want to use it for a foundation for something better :)
asciilifeform: the fucker doesn't even refresh the screen correctly under a perfectly ordinary linux/x11
asciilifeform: but - still no dice. if you're even a little unlucky (like yours truly) and your geometry is just so - geda's polygonal fills fall apart.
decimation: it might suck but at least it won't turn your project into a freemium hook
decimation: this rings a gong for those interested in jumping off the crapware wagon: use kicad
decimation: asciilifeform: apparently altium is going to release a 'free' version of their windows crapware
xmj: ben_vulpes: that's a no ?
mircea_popescu: he's a hacker at heart.
mircea_popescu: it's a coin specific to the industry. plus platform.
asciilifeform: decimation: nothing like tossing a gram of antimatter aboard annoying bugger ship
decimation: well, there's nothing like putting a national flag on your pirate ship
asciilifeform: kakobrekla: feed'em something interesting (let's say mismatched delimiters) & then fetch their turd a few msec after.
mircea_popescu: decimation no, actually, that's a requirement for numbers to work.
decimation: mircea_popescu: yeah that's pretty much the idea. it's amazing that such a seemingly 'approximate' algorithm can be made arbitrarily precise through iteration
tokyopotato: you guys have a resident stand-up comedian?
TheNewDeal: a short novella by thenewdeal
tokyopotato: that's a funny mental image
TheNewDeal: ;;rate tokyopotato 1 May be worth a meet in WA. re: log 9/19 02:00
gribble: Error: 'May' is not a valid integer.
TheNewDeal: ;;rate tokyopotato May be worth a meet in WA. re: log 9/19 02:00
assbot: Dundee counting staff outside after being evacuated due to fire alarm. It looks a little chilly... http://t.co/xzdZqv4Dkv
SubCreative: And a few clients out
danielpbarron: is ethereum even a thing yet? i thought it was still just a pipe dream..
SubCreative: Its not a rejceted idea by any means.
mircea_popescu: TheNewDeal a teenager could have done the obamacare site, too
TheNewDeal: a teenager could do such a thing
TheNewDeal: took a step back with recreational
tokyopotato: Well... if you pay for weed, yeah, but if you grow it... that's a bit different
tokyopotato: TheNewDeal: you should have stopped and hung out with us, you'd have smoked a lot more
danielpbarron: it's probably easy to get consensus for your changes from what few idiots would actually use such a thing, SubCreative
assbot: Cannacoin Interview: A new cryptocurrency contender for the cannabis market - CoinJoint.info
TheNewDeal: It was a pot brownie, as far as I recall
SubCreative: mircea_popescu: Ill give you a interview that covers some of it.
mircea_popescu: SubCreative podcasts are a horrible medium. got the transcript somewhere ?
SubCreative: Currently, we're moving to a PoS 2.0 model in a few weeks.
decimation: any altcoin that wants to replace bitcoin as a savings vehicle is going to require overcoming bitcoin's considerable lead in investment, both in terms of expectation of future value and the build-out of proof-of-work devices
SubCreative: It's not a good one :-\
danielpbarron is flattered to have such a reputation in -otc
SubCreative: I came to participate in a bitcoin-assets channel...
danielpbarron: oh 6 months? well then it couldn't possibly be a scam! how long did gox last?
assbot: Seriously though, is that not a Yes vote on top of the No pile??? /hashtag/indyref?src=hash http://t.co/07kx46cqhW
TheNewDeal: lets say I'm a dispensary purchasing 2kg of medical grade cannabis from a supplier. Is bitcoin too slow?
danielpbarron: SubCreative, a Bitcoin transaction is practically instantaneous -- you'll have to come up with a better pitch than that for your scamcoin if you want to attract any suckers
decimation: in theory one could operate a bitcoin<-> usd atm in a pot shop
decimation: he's a tool
SubCreative: And it's not just a currency, we're a network offering tools and services.
TheNewDeal: it's easy enough to stick an atm in a weed shop
TheNewDeal: on a scale of 1 to 10, how is cannacoin's usability?
mircea_popescu: a coin with unrememberable passwords may be fun
kakobrekla: why does the cannabis industry need a coin of its own?
mircea_popescu: what, and high times is a trade rag ?
kakobrekla: actually i dont think its paid since if you want to get anything done with kraken you must post a some sort of 'complaint' to ze forum.
TheNewDeal: is this just a raw translation of bitbet, or is it some scamsite?
kakobrekla: this has been going on for half a year now
kakobrekla: >We have a lot of security measures designed to prevent theft of Bitcoins, and recently we've had a bug with the security measures that sometimes causes withdrawals to get stuck. It's been hard to diagnose, because often it's just a handful of withdrawals that get stuck, which doesn't give us a lot of diagnostic data. We actually did an update today that we think might resolve the issue, but we won't know for sure until time passes and
decimation: asciilifeform: your algorithm is a simple version of the "cordic algorithm" which is in use by nearly all dsp pros
mircea_popescu: there's kinda 0 incentive to report them from a game pov.
mircea_popescu: actually them being obscure is their main advantage, which is a large part of why i wrote about it
mircea_popescu: you have a dirty mind :D
kakobrekla: my guess is thermos is not a bum with the forum coins.
mircea_popescu: okay, but a) it's such a huge red flag for either russian or english speakers,
penguirker: New blog post: http://trilema.com/2014/heres-a-mystery-the-internet-may-wish-to-help-elucidating/
kakobrekla: you just reported a scam as as scam, you scammer.
ThickAsThieves: scam reporters are notoriously a scam
mircea_popescu: except no bitbet scam reports exist, but for libertard heaven there's no need to actually have anything at all. you can just make a sum of all the things you don't have.
mircea_popescu: maybe it's a cat.
mircea_popescu: so are whores. maybe it's a whore ?
ThickAsThieves: well you now are adding that he is a smart scammer
ThickAsThieves: seems like a great setup, he can copycat while getting referrals and then one day cash that in by selectively scamming
kakobrekla: its a good idea really. he gets all the money, bitbet does all the work. i wish i came up with it!
mircea_popescu: i mean... for any conceivable goal there's a better approach
ThickAsThieves: why does something have to be going on other than a guy that wants to get as many referrals as possible (insecure methods aside)
mircea_popescu: cue six weeks campaign about how "bitbet is a scam" and the burial of the actual scams, from high to low.
mircea_popescu: asciilifeform bfl scammer, had a deal with betsofbitco.in and other similar junklets to make a fake bfl will deliver bet, then call it "unresolvable" and cancel if they don't.